SUNDAY MAGAZINE See Inside Y Sitt a Da3 r PRECIPITOUS Hligh-55 Law-30 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXV, No. 70 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 24, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages e tM- ESEE ?FWS F1APN)4 a lL Z'DAIY Clericals confident As the newly-formed Concerned Clericals for Action/United Auto Workers (CCFA/UAW) pre- pares for its first membership meeting, the union's leadership is confident that the University will re- spect its bargaining power. "The UAW doesn't mess around," CCFA organizer Dan Byrne said yesterday. "I'm sure they (the University aren't going to play around like they have with GEO (the Graduate Employes Organization). UAW wouldn't stand for that sort of thing." The union is asking all clericals to bring their staff I.D. cards and their bodies to a premiere mass meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. The meeting will include election of a bargaining committee. " Happenings .. . . . are typically light on this autumn Sun- day. At 11 a.m., 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., the UAC children's theatre production of 100 Aker Wood, a Winnie-the-Pooh musical, will be perform- ed at the Education School's Schorling Aud. .. . at 8 p.m., the University Dancers present a con- cert and lecture from Vera Embree in the Music School's recital hall . . . the opera Hansel and Gretel will be performed at 2 p.m. in Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre . . . and the Musical Society brings the Georgian Dancers and Choir to Hill at 2:30 p.m. Monday looks a little better, with State Department Researcher Abraham Brumberg discussing "The World of Andrei Sakharov" in Lane Hall's Commons Room at noon . . . the Concerned Clericals for Action/UAW holds its first mass membership meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom . .. a men's rap on "our bodies, self-images and sexuality" begins at 7:30 p.m. in Guild House . . . the Residential College Dancers present "Mobility from There to Here" at 8 p.m. in East Quad Aud. . . . at 4:10 p.m. Prof. Ahmed Hakima of McGill University will lecture on "Oil and Politics: A Historian's View" in 200 Lane Hall .. . English Guest-Actor-in-Residence Nicholas Pennell will read poems by John Betjeman at noon in the Union's Pendleton Rm. . .. the Con- temporary Music Festival will celebrate 'Arnold Schoenberg's 100th birthday with an 8 p.m. Hill concert ... and at 7:30 p.m., members of the Ann Arbor Prison Project will present "A Critique of Behavior Modification in Prisons," in the Union's Kuenzel Room. Ford summit President Ford and Soviet leader Leonid Brezh- nev moved toward agreement in Vladivostock yes- terday on guidelines for a new 10-year treaty lim- iting offensive nuclear weapons. "We are in the same general ballpark," Secretary of State Henry Kissinger told an early-morning news conference after more than six hours of talks between Ford and Brezhnev. "Enough was done to give impetus to the negotiations in Geneva. We have come closer to our goal." Kissinger said the summit was certain to provide "some guidelines" for Ameri- can and Soviet negotiators in Geneva seeking a 10-year treaty limiting missiles, bombers and other means of waging nuclear warfare. Cavett quits Talk show host Dick Cavett has upstaged ABC- TV by announcing - during a videotaping session -that he's ending his career with the network, ef- fective January 1. A spokesman for ABC said yes- terday the network had decided not to renew Cav- ett's contract but had not notified him. However, the performer found out about the decision and made his announcement Friday night while video- taping a January 1 show. CBS-TV confirmed that Cavett and CBS were in the midst of negotiations and an announcement might be forthcoming this week. 0 King of Marvin Gardens Alvin "Big Al" Aldridge, an expert wheeler and dealer in mythical Atlantic City real estate, yesterday was acclaimed the winner and new champion of the Monopoly world. Aldridge achiev- ed total victory in the finals of the Second Annual World Monopoly Championship, winding up with every piece of property on the board in his hands. Aldridge, a reticent, 23-year-old accounting major at Sinclair Community College in Dayton, Ohio, could find nothing to say about his victory except that "it's really beyond words." 0 On the inside .. . . . . in today's Sunday Magazine, Stephen, Selbst looks into the lives of former SDS members, and magazine editor Howard Brick examines Arab- Israeli tension right here in Ann Arbor . . . the Sports Page includes a recap of last night's cru- cial hockey contest, and a full post-mortem of The Game. On the outside ... Today will be a good example of your basic fall day. As a storm passes us early this morning, the rain will end. This will be followed by a flow of colder air behind the storm. Skies will remain rinndu thAg hecase a secnnd storm forming Buckeyes shatter ichigan dream Klaban's four FG's " pace 12-10 triumphi By MARC FELDMAN special To The Daily COLUMBUS - Michigan placekicker Mike Lantry narrowly missed a 33-yard field goal with 18 seconds left, and Tom Klaban booted four Ohio State three- pointers, lifting the Buckeyes to a 12-10 win and a share of the Big Ten title for the third straight year. Lantry, who gave Michigan a 10-0 edge with a first quarter 37-yard field goal, was just wide to the left on the boot that would have given Michigan an undisputed Big Ten Championship, an unbeaten season, and a sure trip to the Rose Bowl. A CZECHOSLOVAKIAN import, Klaban kicked three field goals in the first half and another in the third period, giving the Daily Photo by KEN FINK GORDON BELL (5) picks up some of his 108 yards rushing on this play, as Buckeye Arnie Jones (42) sprawls frustrated on the ground and Ken Thompson (9) sets for the tackle. But Bell's efforts were not enough, as Ohio State won 12-10. 27 STILL HELD: 1ijackers kill one ho stage, releasi By AP and Reuter TUNIS, Tunisia 01) - Three Palestinian gunmen who earlier had executed a German host- age released 13 of their cap- tives last night, but continued to hold 27 others in a coman- deered British jetliner. Six women came down a lad- der placed against the'door of the British Airways jet's cock- pit and walked to the terminal building. Three hours earlier five women, a child and a man were freed the same Way. AFTER THE first release, Tunisian Interior Minister Ta- her Palkhodja told the press that negotiations with the hi- jackers were "proceeding ac- tively" and the drama might soon be resolved. The terrorists had said they would kill their hostages one at a time if 13 guerrillas were not released from confinement in Cairo. Five of the imprison- ed guerrillas were flown here earlier from Cairo, but they re- mained in a building near the control tower. Of the 13 commandos held in Egypt, eight staged last year's attack on the Saudi Arabian embassy in Khartoum and five hijacked a WestGerman air- liner to Kuwait last December after bombing a Pan-American jet at a Rome airport. Coal strike contract talks start WASHINGTON OP)--The gov- ernment's top labor trouble- shooter, declaring an "all-out effort" was needed to settle the nationwide coal strike, moved yesterday into contract talks be- tween the coal industry and striking United Mine Workers. Both sides indicated they would comply with a request by W. J. Usery, director of the Federal Mediation and Concilia- tion Service, asking that union and industry bargaining com- mittees meet with him at 10 a.m. EST today. "THE MOUNTING toll this dispute is inflicting on the na- tion now makes it imperative that a resolution be reached promptly," Usery said. Even if the impasse can be THERE WAS no word on whether the hijackers were still demanding the release of the other eight. Tunisian sources said they were awaiting the arrival of two Palestinian im- prisoned in the Netherlands since April for hijacking a Bri- tish airliner to Amsterdam where they set it on fire. Tunisian authorities have said the Dutch government told them it would be prepared to release the pair, but there has been no confirmation of this from The Hague. I Ipassengers The hijacking, which began cused Iraq of being behind the Thursday when the gunmen attack. comandeered the airliner in Du- A PLO spokesperson in Cairo bai on a flight from London to said his organization opposes Singapore, has been decried by giving in to the hijackers' de- the Arabs as an attempt to mands. Egypt at first refused embarrass Palestine Libera- to negotiate with the hijackers, tion Organization (PLO) leader but the Egyptian Foreign Minis- Yasir Arafat. ,nt t 1.Ui d t tL t1 t x Buckeyes the nationally televised victory. Stopping an Ohio State team without a touchdown for the first time in seven years, the Wolverine defense held the Bucks to 253 total yards and kept them bottled up for much of the afternoon. In a pressure-packed final two minutes, the Wolverines did nearly everything right, but still came up short. Faced with a fourth down and 20 deep in Michigan territory, Wolverine punter John Anderson boomed a 55-yarder to the Buckeye 25. TWO OSU rushers gained five vards and Michigan middle guard Tim Davis sacked quar- terback Cornelius Greene for an eight yard lose, forcing a punt. Michigan, having used two timeouts during the preceeding Buckeye possession, still had 57 seconds to work after Tom Skla- dany punted to Dave Brown at - the Michigan 47. U Quarterback Dennis Franklin, who had trouble cutting on his sore ankle all day, cranked up the Wolverine offense for one last charge. FRANKLIN immediately hit Jim Smith for a 21 yard gain t I to the Ohio 32. After a clock- stopping incompletion, tailback Rob Lytle cracked through the line for ten and six yard gains, moving the pigskin to the 16 with 18 seconds left. BEDF Lantry missed the field goal, Arizona1 and following a joyous on-field announc celebration by many of the try to1 Ohio Stadium throng of 88,243, electedd the Bucks ran out the clock. of Repre In last year's infamous 10-10 Udalll tie in Ann Arbor, Lantry was crat to unsuccessful on two field goals his presi in the waning seconds but again he told, yesterday a reserved Bo Schem- wouldr bechler insisted that neither he Hampsh nor his team blamed the 26- the natio year-old senior. already Republic, "THIS KID is a helluva kid," Rubli said Bo." He's kicked more UDAL field goals and more extra two yea points than any guy in Mich- reflected igan history. I don't blame him the last and none of my players do paigning either. ration.S "When you have to win the (D-Mass game with a last-second field (D-Minn goal you can't hold the kid re- drawnfa sponsible who kicked the ball, they ha( We should have had the game tered. out of reach by then." Udall The way the game started nedy'sv out for the Wolverines, it didn't nominati appear that any Hollywood He did heroics would be needed this but Ud year. The last four Michigan- Kennedy Ohio State games have been trasts s decided by just eight points, conserv but Michigan struck quickly is expe See FOUR, Page 8 candidac THE HIJACKERS apparent- ly were members of a splinter group bitterly opposed to Ara- fat's readiness to accept a po- litical solution to the Middle East conflict. The PLO has ac- r y issueu a statement yesier- day saying President Anwar Sa- dat agreed to the release after appeals from the leaders of Tunisia, Algeriahand Lebanon and the Western European countries the hostages came from. N rsing home inmates are poor, sick,' claims official Udall fall to ike bid p res. Iction ORD, N.H. (UPI) - Democrat Morris Udall ed yesterday he will be the first President directly from the House esentatives since 1881. became the first Demo- give formal notice of idential candidacy when a news conference he run in the 1976 New ire primary, the first in in. President Ford has said he will seek the can nomination. L'S DECISION nearly rs before the election d the growing trend of 15 years to start cam- soon after the inaugu- Sens. Edward Kennedy .) and Walter Mondale .) have already with- from the race, which d never formally en- told the press Ken- withdrawal meant the ion was "wide open." not mention Mondale, all is a liberal in the y-Mondale mold and con- harply with the more ative politics of Sen. Jackson (D-Wash.) who cted to announce his cy early next year. By LOIS JOSIMOVICH The elderly residents of Michigan's 520 nurs- ing homes and homes for the aged are "poor, sick and isolated," according to Charles Cho- met, executive director of Citizens for Better Care (CBC). Chomet, w h o s e organization channels com- plaints and battles legal problems for the elder- ly, described their plight last week to a small crowd in the Public Health Auditorium. "EIGHTY-FIVE per cent of these people are 65 or older, and about one-third are what we call culturally deprived, they have no visitors," said Chomet. "You can see from this that they wouldn't have much political power." Chomet claimed feelings of isolation from the outer world that even mentally alert patients experience makes them fear complaining to the management of their homes-even when they notice unsanitary conditions, lack of sufficient health care, and other abuses. Chomet said, "The only thing that can be done (about a low-quality nursing home) is to have it closed." He then described the kind of nursing home he had in mind. DURING TWO inspections of a Detroit nursing home last year, public officials noticed flies coming in contact with the food, unpleasant odors, dirt, nonfunctional utilities such as toilets, and even an absence of toilet paper in the bath- rooms. "This home has now been denied Medicaid," Chomet explained, but he added that the home was still operating in October, when 45 violations to the State Health Code were recorded. Chomet said the home also had a record of "questionable altercations" between nurses and patients, including verbal abuse from the staff, and many instances of accidents and negligence. See NURSING, Page 2 Ins' and 'outs' of localpbIng By ROB MEACHUM Ann Arbor generally takes pride in bucking national trends. But when it comes to drinking, we line right up with the national norm. As with the rest of the country, gin and vodka have become the city's most popular hard liquors. Bourbon, formerly Number One, has dropped to third place. LOCAL BARTENDERS attribute this to the college crowd's taste for sweet drinks, and they say the more traditional Man- ? # hattans and martinis are suffering. 0 Gin has always been a popular mixer, according to a bar- tender at the Pretzel Bell. And vodka, with its delicate flavor,